Date: 1755
"Dim, as the borrow'd beams of moon and stars / To lonely, weary, wand'ring travellers, / Is reason to the soul."
preview | full record— Dryden [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"When she rates things, and moves from ground to ground, / The name of reason she obtains by this; / But when reason she the truth has found, / And standeth fixed, she understanding is."
preview | full record— Davies [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"When valour preys on reason / It eats the sword it fights with"
preview | full record— Shakespeare [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"Whether it be a divine revelation or no, reason must judge, which can never permit the mind to reject a greater evidence to embrace what is less evident."
preview | full record— Locke [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"Malignant tempers ... will discover their natural tincture of mind."
preview | full record— Addison [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
A stamp may be settled deep into the mind
preview | full record— Locke [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"These simple ideas, offered to the mind, the understanding can no more refuse, nor alter, nor blot out, than a mirrour can refuse, alter, or obliterate, the images which the objects produce"
preview | full record— Locke [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
Heads overfull of matter, be like pens over full of ink, which will sooner blot, than make any fair letters at all.
preview | full record— Ascham's Schoolmaster [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"These prodigious conceits in nature spring out of framing abstracted conceptions, instead of those easy and primary notions which nature stamps alike in all men of common sense."
preview | full record— Digby on Bodies [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"No constant reason of this can be given, but from the nature of man's mind, which hath this notion of a deity born with it, and stamped upon it; or is of such a frame, that in the free use of itself will find God."
preview | full record— Tillotson [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]